3 Prime Video Movies Complete 10/10 (February 2026)

Looking for your next favorite movie? You’ll probably find it on Amazon Prime Video.
In addition to streaming good or very good movies, Prime Video has a select number of movies that it can say are not rated, with a perfect 10/10.
If you are the type of person only If you’re looking for works of art, look no further than these three films.
And our selection covers a wide range of genres, including musicals, comedy and horror.
Our first choice La La Land, the star of a sweet romantic musical Emma Stone again Ryan Gosling.
‘La La Land’ (2016)
After first meeting during a road rage incident, struggling jazz pianist Sebastian (Gosling) and aspiring actress Mia (Emma Stone) reunite months later, when Mia encourages Sebastian to continue pursuing his dreams. Drawn to each other by their infectious love and shared goal of doing what they love, Mia and Seb end up falling in love and living together. But as their success grows, they find themselves faced with growing uncertainty about their relationship.
While La La Land nearly swept the Academy Awards back in 2017, it was duly stopped Moonlight during that famous photo snafu. However, if Damien ChazelleThe Oscar film had taken home the Oscar gold instead, we couldn’t have been sad about it. Gosling and Stone continue to display the chemistry they first shared in 2011 Crazy, Stupid, Loveand Chazelle’s clear love for stage music and jazz comes through in this delightful modern musical drama.
‘Hundreds of Beavers’ (2024)
This 2024 indie comedy outing takes a different approach to telling its quirky story. Shot entirely in black and white and without dialogue, the film follows an apple seller named Jean Kayak (Ryland Tews), who finds himself at the mercy of hundreds of beavers who intend to destroy his life. Also, the beavers are all played by guys in giant beaver suits. After beavers destroy Jean’s apple orchard, she struggles to survive in the Pacific Northwest by trying to become a professional fur trapper.
You may never have seen a movie like this Hundreds of Beavers earlier in your life, especially since it’s an hour and 48 minutes of wordless video game and Looney Tunes-esque slapstick violence. This epic premise manages to stay stable through directing verve, stylish editing and a deluge of classic gags that don’t get old when they put the boys in big beaver lines. Unique, creative and unforgettable, Hundreds of Beavers he breathes new life into modern comics.
‘The Descent’ (2005)
A year after the great trauma caused by the death of her husband and daughter, Sara (Shauna Macdonald) reunites with his thrill-seeking friends on an epic adventure in the Appalachian Mountains of North Carolina. But when the friends descend into the cave structure, they find that they have been led down an unexplored path after being caught in a collapsing tunnel. With nowhere else to go but forward, the group ventures deeper into the cave, where a bloody horror lurks silently deep within the Earth, waiting for them.
Getting down it’s a horror movie masterclass; a powder keg of claustrophobia and tension that will make you swear off any future spelunking ideas if they ever cross your mind. In an enclosed setting surrounded by darkness while terrifying predators follow them unseen, Getting down simple art, an unabashed fear of making its audience feel as vulnerable and exposed as its characters.




